Washougal’s basketball culture is attracting new fans to the stands following a remarkable metamorphosis within Washougal High School’s hoops programs.
The change started with the girls team winning the school’s first basketball state championship in 2019. Less than one year later, the Panthers’ boys program, which has struggled for decades, is heating up thanks to a solid group of seniors and a rare freshman talent.
Ninth-grader Yanni Fassilis is the team’s second-leading scorer, right behind senior Jakob Davis, who is having a great senior season after missing his junior season with a knee injury.
“(Fassilis) is a true talent and plays like a vet out there,” Davis said.
“He eats, lives and sleeps basketball. He loves it,” Panthers coach AJ LaBree said about Fassilis. “The reason he is as good as he is is that he puts in so much time in, and obviously he’s got some physical ability. You take last year’s core and add in two high-level players, and we are a completely different team because Davis and Fassilis are both 6-foot-3 power forwards who can handle the ball.”
Freshman starter moved from Camas to Washougal
Freshmen starters aren’t common in Washougal. Beyonce Bea, last season’s 2A player of the year — who now plays for the University of Idaho women’s basketball team — is the only other example Panthers coaches could come up with.